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Dr. Burgess's current research programme explores the role of community engagement in global health, with an emphasis on women's mental health. She is interested in the development and promotion of interventions that address the political economy of poor mental health globally. This involves the development of treatment options that respond to the social determinants of mental health (mainly poverty) alongside psychological and psychiatric care, for marginalised groups in low income and high income settings. Collaborative, participatory and coproduction approaches are a huge part of this work.
In 2015 she was awarded an early career research award from the Richard Benjamin Trust to explore the ability for brief group interventions for women's depression to promote action on social determinants of health and wider forms of health related empowerment. The project was a collaboration with the DFID-funded PRIME research consortium, applying ethnographic and life history approaches.
She co-led on one of the first studies of participatory approaches as a mode of intervention for mental health, with colleagues from La Universidad de la Sabana, Bogota, in Colombia. Their project Promoting trauma resilient communities, piloted Participatory Action Research Cycles (PAR) as a mode of intervention for mental health, in an attempt to prioritise local understandings of mental distress and recovery through community-led action on a range of contexts. This study was funded by Universidad de la Sabana and supported by the National Centre for Historic Memory, Colombia.
In 2018 she launched UCLs Global Network on Mental Health and Child Marriage. Alongside colleagues from the WHO, African Union, ODI and other colleagues she is exploring the largely overlooked mental health consequences of child marriage in high prevalence settings. This includes work in Zimbabwe and Nepal with communities to understand these relationships and piloting supports for related mental health issues in these settings. She was recently awarded an Academy of Medical Sciences Springboard award to work with communities in Zimbabwe to map patterns of risk and resilience to mental health consequences of child marriage in families, and develop community led solutions to this global problem.
In 2020 with colleagues at University of York, she launched a new network on Participatory approaches in Global Mental Health, of which she is Co-Director.
Dr. Burgess's current research programme explores the role of community engagement in global health, with an emphasis on women's mental health. She is interested in the development and promotion of interventions that address the political economy of poor mental health globally. This involves the development of treatment options that respond to the social determinants of mental health (mainly poverty) alongside psychological and psychiatric care, for marginalised groups in low income and high income settings. Collaborative, participatory and coproduction approaches are a huge part of this work.
In 2015 she was awarded an early career research award from the Richard Benjamin Trust to explore the ability for brief group interventions for women's depression to promote action on social determinants of health and wider forms of health related empowerment. The project was a collaboration with the DFID-funded PRIME research consortium, applying ethnographic and life history approaches.
She co-led on one of the first studies of participatory approaches as a mode of intervention for mental health, with colleagues from La Universidad de la Sabana, Bogota, in Colombia. Their project Promoting trauma resilient communities, piloted Participatory Action Research Cycles (PAR) as a mode of intervention for mental health, in an attempt to prioritise local understandings of mental distress and recovery through community-led action on a range of contexts. This study was funded by Universidad de la Sabana and supported by the National Centre for Historic Memory, Colombia.
In 2018 she launched UCLs Global Network on Mental Health and Child Marriage. Alongside colleagues from the WHO, African Union, ODI and other colleagues she is exploring the largely overlooked mental health consequences of child marriage in high prevalence settings. This includes work in Zimbabwe and Nepal with communities to understand these relationships and piloting supports for related mental health issues in these settings. She was recently awarded an Academy of Medical Sciences Springboard award to work with communities in Zimbabwe to map patterns of risk and resilience to mental health consequences of child marriage in families, and develop community led solutions to this global problem.
In 2020 with colleagues at University of York, she launched a new network on Participatory approaches in Global Mental Health, of which she is Co-Director.
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